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SUPPORTING REPRESSION AND TORTURE IN CUBA
AMERICAN THINKER ^ | Dec 19, 2014 | Fay Voshell

Posted on 12/20/2014 6:47:45 PM PST by Dqban22

Obama has evidenced a preference for authoritarian regimes. His preference is why he did not force concessions from Cuba, concessions that would have fostered democratic reforms and given hope to those languishing in Castro’s Stygian domains. He appears to be more interested in sanctioning and weakening Israel, our sole democratic ally in the Middle East, than he is in enforcing the current embargo against Cuba. He seems to be more interested in sitting down at the bargaining table with Iran than he is in strengthening relations with America’s Western allies. The president’s actions have enormous implications.

(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: againstallhope; armandovalladares; bloggers; cuba; embargo
"Who ignore history is damned to repeat it" George Santayana
1 posted on 12/20/2014 6:47:45 PM PST by Dqban22
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To: Dqban22
what were seein here...is plum




2 posted on 12/20/2014 6:49:29 PM PST by MeshugeMikey ("Never, Never, Never, Give Up," Winston Churchill ><>)
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To: Dqban22

The Left is OK with real torture.

They care only about pretend torture their make-believe world.


3 posted on 12/20/2014 6:56:56 PM PST by UnwashedPeasant (A slave is one who waits for someone to come and free him.)
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To: Dqban22

Obama's hero and surrogate father: Frank Marshall Davis. Communist.

4 posted on 12/20/2014 6:58:47 PM PST by SoFloFreeper
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To: Dqban22

Please do not alter the original title - it makes searches malfunction and results in duplicate postings. Thanks


5 posted on 12/20/2014 6:59:05 PM PST by Admin Moderator
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To: All

Good thing Obama beat Romney or our country would really be screwed.


6 posted on 12/20/2014 7:12:28 PM PST by doug from upland (Obama and the leftists - destroying our country one day at a time)
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To: Dqban22

I’ve posted the image in other forums before, one of the most inspirational books I ever read was “Against all hope” by Armando Valladares. The article cites his book. When life gets tough, that guy was in a prison on trumped up charges for 20 plus years.

The article reads:

“The book is Armando Valladares’ Against All Hope, the account of his decades’ long imprisonment and torture by the regime of Fidel Castro.”

Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2014/12/supporting_repression_and_torture_in_cuba.html#ixzz3MUzFpPtH

A hero of mine definitely. If he can get through that, I hope most of us can get through anything life puts us through. God Bless.


7 posted on 12/20/2014 7:21:51 PM PST by BeadCounter
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To: BeadCounter

http://www.amazon.com/Against-All-Hope-Memoir-Castros/dp/1893554198/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top

The book at amazon. One of the other paperback versions is for only a penny used if anyone is interested. Great book.

http://www.amazon.com/Against-All-Hope-Memoirs-Valladares/dp/0394534255/ref=la_B001I9U4MG_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1419132344&sr=1-2


8 posted on 12/20/2014 7:24:49 PM PST by BeadCounter
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To: BeadCounter

I feel like saying this about that book, STASI, East German Intelligence was on the island.

Did you hear the CIA was accused of putting the one terrorist suspect in a cell the size of a casket and this is unconfirmed.

In the Valladares book, he called it a drawer cell and people were put in “drawer cells”, what they do about going to the bathroom and so on, I don’t know.

Also, diets were given to prisoners during one stint where maybe a necessary mineral or vitamin in a diet was denied, say your vitamin C or whatever, prisoners would develop goiters.

Anyway, that’s a little about what’s in that book. The part about the rats, I forgot but I think the regime killed a lot of people including Priests.


9 posted on 12/20/2014 7:30:38 PM PST by BeadCounter
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To: Dqban22
Image and video hosting by TinyPic
10 posted on 12/20/2014 11:53:27 PM PST by MtnMan101
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To: MtnMan101

Cluelessness on Cuba (Humberto Fontova)
12,26,2014

Excerpts

http://townhall.com/columnists/humbertofontova/2014/12/26/rand-pauls-cluelessness-on-cuba-n1935926/print

First off, if Castro “secretly favors the embargo,” then why did every one of his secret agents campaign secretly and obsessively against the embargo while working as secret agents? Castro managed the deepest and most damaging penetration of the U.S. Department of Defense in recent U.S. history. The spy’s name is Ana Belen Montes, known as “Castro’s Queen Jewel” in the intelligence community. In 2002 she was convicted of the same crimes as Ethel and Julius Rosenberg and today she serves a 25-year sentence in Federal prison. Only a plea bargain spared her from sizzling in the electric chair like the Rosenberg’s.

In fact, few U.S. foreign policy measures in recent history have been as phenomenally successful as our limited sanctions against the Stalinist Robber-Barons who run Cuba. First off, for three decades the Soviet Union was forced to pump the equivalent of almost ten Marshall Plans into Cuba.

This cannot have helped the Soviet Union’s precarious solvency or lengthened her life span. Secondly, the U.S. taxpayer has been spared the fleecing visited upon many others who reside in nations who eschew “embargoing” Cuba.

Per-capita-wise, Cuba qualifies as the world’s biggest debtor nation with a foreign debt of close to $50 billion, a credit–rating nudging Somalia’s, and an uninterrupted record of defaults.

In 1986 Cuba defaulted on most of her foreign debt to Europe. Seven years ago France’s version of the U.S. government’s Export-Import Bank (named COFACE) cut off Cuba’s credit line. Mexico’s Bancomex quickly followed suit. The Castro regime had stuck it to French taxpayers for $175 million and to Mexican taxpayers for $365 million.

Bancomex was forced to impound Cuban assets in three different countries in an attempt to recoup its losses.
A bit later we heard from another Castro sucker: “The Cuban regime has a long track record of failing to pay back our loans,” lamented South Africa’s Deputy Minister of Trade & Industry, Geordin Hill-Lewis. “In 2010, South Africa had to write off R1.1 billion in bad Cuban debt, and on Friday we wrote off another R250 million in bad debt. The time has come for South Africa to invest in strategic partnerships that deliver prosperity for our people.”

in 1960 stormed into almost 6000 U.S. owned businesses (worth almost $ 2 billion at the time) and stole them all at Soviet gunpoint. A few American business-owners resisted. One of these was Howard Anderson who owned a filling stations and Jeep dealership (not a casino or brothel, which were relatively rare in pre-Castro Cuba, by the way.) I’ll quote from Anderson v. Republic of Cuba, No. 01-28628 (Miami-Dade Circuit Court, April 13, 2003). “In one final session of torture, Castro’s agents drained Howard Anderson’s body of blood before sending him to his death at the firing squad.”

The Inter-American Law Review classifies Castro’s mass burglary of U.S. property as “the largest uncompensated taking of American property by a foreign government in history.” Rubbing his hands and snickering in triumphant glee, Castro boasted at maximum volume to the entire world that he was freeing Cuba from “Yankee economic slavery!” (Che Guevara’s term, actually) and that “he would never repay a penny!”

This is the only promise Fidel Castro has ever kept in his life. Hence the imposition of the Cuba embargo, not that you’d know any of this from the mainstream media.

The burglarized (and often brutalized) American owners filed those property claims against Castro’s regime with the U.S. government. They’re worth $7 billion today—and must be settled before the so called embargo is lifted.

This settlement provision for lifting the embargo was codified into U.S. law in 1996 by the Helms-Burton act, which means only Congress can lift the embargo, obviously after a vote. But the votes are not there.

Shouldn’t Rand Paul know this?

In 1967 libertarian icon Murray Rothbard seemed highly bereaved and aggrieved to hear of Che Guevara’s whacking. Here’ his encomium to the Stalinist who outlawed private property under penalty of torture-chamber and firing-squad:
“Che is dead, and we all mourn him. Long live Che! Why? How is it that so many libertarians mourn this man?...What made Che such an heroic figure for our time is that he, more than any man of our epoch or even of our century, was the living embodiment of the principle of Revolution… we all knew that his enemy was our enemy–that great Colossus that oppresses and threatens all the peoples of the world, U. S. imperialism.”

Ron Paul regards Murray Rothbard as one of America’s “greatest men” and “greatest heroes of freedom.” Rand Paul, considers it an honor to have met Murray Rothbard and a “privilege” to have once driven him to the airport.

So let’s hope simple “cluelessness” motivates Rand


11 posted on 12/26/2014 12:36:57 PM PST by Dqban22 (Hpo<p> http://i.imgur.com/26RbAPx.jpg)
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